Jared Kushner didn't disclose business ties to George Soros, Peter Thiel, and Goldman Sachs, or that he owes $1 billion in loans

Jared Kushner didn't disclose his business ties with George
Soros, Peter Thiel, and Goldman Sachs, or that he owes $1 billion
in loans,
The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday.

The top White House adviser and son-in-law of Trump failed to
identify his part ownership of
Cadre, a real-estate startup he founded, which links him to
the Goldman Sachs Group and the mega-investors George Soros and
Peter Thiel, sources told The Journal.

Jamie Gorelick, an attorney for Kushner, told The Journal in a
statement that Cadre was part of BFPS Ventures LLC, a company
Kushner owns and identified in his government
financial-disclosure forms.

Gorelick also said a revised version of Kushner's form that
includes Cadre would be made available once ethics officials have
looked at it.

Kushner also failed to identify debt of more than $1 billion from
20 lenders and personal guarantees to pay more than $300 million
of that, according to The Journal.

While Gorelick called revisions to the disclosure "very normal,"
ethics experts told The Journal that the loans and guarantees
should be disclosed so officials could decide whether Kushner
needs to recuse himself from issues that involve his lenders.
Investment in startups like Cadre should definitely be disclosed,
experts said.

"Anything that presents a potential for the conflict of interest
should be disclosed so that the public and the press can monitor
this," Trevor Potter, a former chairman of the Federal Election
Commission, told The Journal.

A source told The Journal that Kushner planned to recuse himself
from anything that concerned Deutsche Bank or RBS, two lenders
that have given him money for his properties or companies and to
which he has provided personal guarantees on loans.

He still owes money to Bank of America, Blackstone Group,
Citigroup, UBS, Deutsche Bank, and RBS, all of which were not
disclosed, according to The Journal.